Credit Score Q&A: Positive and Negative Actions on FICO Score

Q: if you cancel/close a credit card account within a short time (lets say 6 months) you took it, will it affect your credit score?

A:  It will probably not.  This kind of behavior should fall into the “New Credit” section that is in your credit report, however, since the majority of this section is to figure out your interest to new credit, the more you are interested, the more negative to your credit.  Given this guideline, if you close new accounts shortly, that doesn’t affect your credit score negatively.

References: How Your FICO Credit Score is calculated from myFICO.com.  You may also find out your FICO score by visiting here.

FICO Scores are calculated from a lot of different credit data in your credit report. This data can be grouped into five categories as outlined below. The percentages in the chart reflect how important each of the categories is in determining your FICO score.

What's in your FICO?

These percentages are based on the importance of the five categories for the general population. For particular groups – for example, people who have not been using credit long – the importance of these categories may be somewhat different.

Payment History

Amounts Owed

Length of Credit History

New Credit

Types of Credit Used

Also check out service review of credit reporting/monitoring and identity theft services

Important Disclaimer: the credit cards information in this post were accurate as of the date of publishing, some or all of the card programs may be discontinued, their terms may be changed after wards.

Service Review: Consumer Credit Reporting / Monitoring and Identity Theft Protection Services

This post lists out major service provider in credit reporting/monitoring and identity theft protection.  Credit repairing has got a bad name due to some businesses’ abusive activities, therefore businesses providing that service have been excluded for readers’ benefit.

Please feel free to share with us any of your unhappy experience with these agencies so that this list can be maintained constantly useful to readers.

Credit Reporting/Monitoring

myFICO® is the consumer division of Fair Isaac, the company that invented the FICO® credit risk score that lenders use. Starting in the 1960s, Fair Isaac sparked a revolution by pioneering credit risk scoring for the financial services industry. This new approach to lending enabled financial institutions to improve their business performance and expand consumers’ access to credit. Today Fair Isaac’s FICO® score is widely recognized as the industry standard for lenders.

myFICO® offers Score Watch service to consumers, the service includes

Equifax is public listed company, member of S&P 500 index.  On Consumer service side, Equifax offers credit management products like 3-in-1 Credit Report and Score Watch help consumers make informed decisions when making purchases, securing loans, paying for college educations, and managing their personal finances.

Identity theft is the fastest growing white collar crime in America. One in five families have been affected by this epidemic. Identity theft protection products like Equifax’s Credit Watch Gold™ with 3-in-1 Monitoring continually monitor consumers’ credit files and alert them of potentially fraudulent activity like a new credit card application that they did not initiate.

CreditReport.com provides free credit reports and credit scores to consumers in a secure, online environment. Its Credit Monitoring service alerts customers to changes across all 3 of their credit reports while Credit Score Tracking notifies customers to significant changes in their credit score.

Identity Theft Protection

As identify theft is the fastest growing crime in United States,  protection services emerge in response to proactively protect consumers from this crime.

TrustedID’s®  innovative flagship product – IDFreeze® – stops identity theft before it ever happens. Secured from identity theft by their 15 points of protection which includes protection for children, seniors, and medical records.  In addition, TrustedID’s® also rolled out a new product Identity Threat Score™ on Oct. 27, 2009, which provides a gauge of an individual’s risk of identity theft by assessing millions of records on hundreds of public and private databases. This information is then analyzed for patterns that could indicate if the customer has been or is about to be a victim of identity theft.

IdentityTruth.com provides identity theft protection services starting from $10/month.  They use innovative technology to offer customers the earliest possible notificationTM of identity misuse and threats. IdentityTruth is a privately held, VC- funded company headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts. Investors include Argonaut Ventures and Stata Venture Partners.  They are offering customers the chance to test our services on a risk free basis before making a purchase.

ID Watchdog offers patent-pending technology that continually scans thousands of credit, social security, DMV, medical, public records and other databases.  They search for fraudulent activity and notify you of anything suspicious.

Also included in the free trial offer of ID Watchdog Plus is a free ID Theft Profile.  This cross references thousands of databases, checks for any instances of previous ID theft and is valued at $19.95.

LifeLock provides a proactive identity theft service, specializing in the prevention of identity theft rather than the reporting of it. LifeLock was founded in 2005.

Also refer to my previous post: Credit Score Q&A

Important Disclaimer: the credit cards information in this post were accurate as of the date of publishing, some or all of the card programs may be discontinued, their terms may be changed after wards.

Comparison of Car Insurance Programs

Car insurance program is something that you have to join in order to protect yourself and to be a legal driver.  With so many choices available on market: Progressive, Geico, Nationwide, eSurance…which one of them best fit your need?  This is a question that many people have.

Trying to address this question, I create this post to summarize the pros and cons of each car insurance program, this post will be maintained continuously as new information flows in to keep in up to date.

The information source of this post will be based on comments from consumers who actually used certain car insurance program or industry experts.   Follow the links below to get a quote and compare for your individual case.

Geico, well known brand in the industry, overall good reputation, prices may be higher than eSurance, but remains competitive in the industry.  Its website allows customers to change policy online conveniently, it also offers good customer service and road side assistance.

21 Century, part of AIG, the big insurance company that got government support.  21st Century is inexpensive if you fit into low risk profession, but price rockets if you don’t.  21st Century has so far proven to be the best deal in car insurance.  Easy form to fill out, low cost, fast customer service.

Allstate, the company is usually compared with Geico since in many cases customers get same quote from the two companies (do they use the same model to assess the risk profile of individual?), but Allstate’s customer service may need some improvement, according to some customers.  Allstate offers “Choice Auto Insurance” which claims to keep rates from going up due to an accident and to fully replace a totaled car with a brand new one.

Comparisons: one consumer recommended to use Geico if you want full coverage.  If your profession is a low risk one, 21st Century may be the best choice for its low cost and good customer service.  If you want to prevent your rates from going up due to a car accident, you may consider Allstate who offers “Choice Auto Insurance“.

Important Disclaimer: the credit cards information in this post were accurate as of the date of publishing, some or all of the card programs may be discontinued, their terms may be changed after wards.

Product Review: Tax Preparation Software, TaxCut vs TurboTax

We are in red-hot tax season, WSJ editor tried the two most popular tax preparation software: HR Block’s TaxCut and Intuit’s TurboTax, and concluded that TurboTax is of better quality than TaxCut.  One of the convenient features from TurboTax is “instant data entry”, which allows you to import W-2 or stock transaction data electronically, rather than enter data one by one:

It wasn’t easy to pick a winner, since both programs are so similar and so much depends on the details of your specific situation. But in our tests, TurboTax, the long-standing sales leader, came out on top. While it won’t make doing your taxes fun, we found it generally more user-friendly, easier to navigate and easier to understand.

Source:

Testing Tax-Preparation Software

Other Tax Preparation Softwares:

CompleteTax
Tax$imple

Important Disclaimer: the credit cards information in this post were accurate as of the date of publishing, some or all of the card programs may be discontinued, their terms may be changed after wards.

Rate Q&A: APY to APR and APR to APY conversion methods

APR and APY are common concepts of savings interest rate that you have to deal with.  For example, the review of online saving accounts lists APY version of various bank’s saving account interest rates.  The concepts of APR and APY are so close to each other, they sometimes confuse a lot of people.  In fact, they describe the same thing, interest rate, from two perspectives.  APR stands for Annual Percentage Return, it measures how much interest dollar you will get if you cash out whenever you earn interest.  APY stands for Annual Percentage Yield, it measures how much interest dollar you will get if you don’t cash out interest earned, but put it back to earn interest again.

The two types of rates are interchangable, here is how to convert one to the other.   Before you calculate, you need to set a method of compounding, which is how many pieces you want to slice a year into.  Daily compounding slices a year into 365 days, then periods of year is 365.  Monthly compounding slices a year into 12 months, then periods of year is 12.  With this in your mind, you can start converting.

Supposing you want to calculate daily rate for the year of 2009 which has 365 days total.

If you have APR available, here is how to calculate APY:

APY = (APR / periods of year + 1) ^ periods of year – 1

For example, for APR 2.08%, and you want daily APY,

APY = (2.08% / 365 + 1) ^ 365 – 1 = 2.10%

Converting APY to APR is a little more complicated, say If you have APY available, and need APR

APR = ((1 + APY) ^ (1/periods of year) – 1) * periods of year

For example, for APY 2.10%, and you want daily APR,

APR = ((1 + 2.1%) ^ (1/365) – 1) * 365 = 2.08%

Important Disclaimer: the credit cards information in this post were accurate as of the date of publishing, some or all of the card programs may be discontinued, their terms may be changed after wards.